The Norwalk Hour

TWISTS AND TURNS

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One night on a long drive during a storm, her thoughts are spinning and spiraling. A day later, her car is abandoned far from home and a note left behind says her family would be better off without her. She is one of thousands of people who walk away from their lives. Or did she?

Cue the twists and turns and in a split-frame narrative, readers will find themselves riding along with both Molly and her older daughter, Nicole, who gets a mysterious call two weeks after her mom goes missing. She sets out to find her, putting herself in danger.

Walker finds inspiratio­n everywhere, usually in things she reads or from the news, but occasional­ly it strikes at the oddest times or places. This is her first book where an actual moment from her life inspired a book. Coming home from a soccer game her son played in some years ago, she was in the middle of a four-hour drive on Connecticu­t’s many twisty back roads through small towns. The game was awful with bad ref calls, heckling fans and a loss for her son’s team. Walker was upset and also processing the end of her first long-term relationsh­ip since her divorce. Pumping gas in a small station in the middle of a rural town, she spied a small road presumably heading into a small town. A random thought just popped into her head. “It was ‘Walk down that road. Walk away from everything so you can stop feeling this emotional pain,’” she said, saying it was a bizarre and fleeting thought, which she of course, did not act on but thought about it later.

“As a writer you grab hold of those moments. And you think how bizarre and where did that come from and what if somebody did that?” she said, explaining how she gave her character a powerful enough emotional backstory to make it credible she might walk away from her life.

Without giving away spoilers, readers find out Molly didn’t just walk away and is being held prisoner along with a young girl, Alice, who may hold the key to her escape. Being raised in this environmen­t by a sociopath has scarred the girl and Molly has to choose her actions and words carefully to build a relationsh­ip with her in order to get free.

“Because it’s a psychologi­cal thriller, I wanted the reader to be with Molly in her captivity and to experience this little girl who has been held captive and her psychology is so different,” Walker said. “Her empathy is all askew, she’s not a normal child but she’s not evil. She has just not had all the things a child needs to develop normally.”

Walker’s favorite scenes to write were between Molly and Alice. As a former family law attorney and guardian ad litem, she was already familiar with the psychology of sociopathi­c behavior and how it can affect children. “I just knew how to write her. I knew how Alice would respond to things and the characteri­stics that she would have,” she said. “With Molly’s journey I really leaned in hard to the lifting of grief. For Molly, it’s not just the loss of her daughter. Deep down she feels that she has never been punished for what she considers to be her role in Annie’s death.” During Molly’s captivity, readers see her starting to move past her grief and fighting for her life and then for her daughter. “Just a lot of complexity that I tried to add along with the thrilling page-turning stuff,” she said. “I always tend to lean into the psychologi­cal element and the emotional elements too. For me I want to be emotionall­y connected to my characters.”

For more informatio­n, visit wendywalke­rbooks.com.

 ?? Bill Miles / Contribute­d photo ?? Stamford author Wendy Walker published her latest novel “Don’t Look for Me” on Sept. 15.
Bill Miles / Contribute­d photo Stamford author Wendy Walker published her latest novel “Don’t Look for Me” on Sept. 15.

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